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Become a Sudoku Master! Whatever Your Level, You'll Love This Sudoku Puzzle Book! This Book Features The Following: · 18 Very Easy Sudoku 9x9 Puzzles · 18 Easy Sudoku 9x9 Puzzles · 18 Medium Sudoku 9x9 Puzzles · 18 Hard Sudoku 9x9 Puzzles · 18 Very Hard Sudoku 9x9 Puzzles · 18 Extreme Sudoku 9x9 Puzzles High quality symmetrical puzzles. Two puzzles per page, set out in a 5.25x8 inch format. Full solutions for all puzzles at the back of the book. Plenty of white space for number scribbling. High quality paperback, not magazine quality. The book is small in size but the numbers are printed in large font, easy to read. Every puzzle in this book has been carefully checked to ensure that each puzzle has only one possible solution. Lots of Fun! No Math Skills Needed! The Perfect Gift for All Ages! GET YOUR COPY NOW!
Longlisted for the PEN America/E.O. Wilson Prize for Literary Science Writing "Well worth the read. . . . [A] prescient handoff to the next generation of scholars." —The Washington Post From "one of the world’s foremost thinkers" (Bill Moyers), a profound, hopeful, and timely call for an emerging new collective consciousness to combat climate change Over his long career as witness to an extreme twentieth century, National Book Award-winning psychiatrist, historian, and public intellectual Robert Jay Lifton has grappled with the profound effects of nuclear war, terrorism, and genocide. Now he shifts to climate change, which, Lifton writes, "presents us with what may be the most demanding and unique psychological task ever required of humankind," what he describes as the task of mobilizing our imaginative resources toward climate sanity. Thanks to the power of corporate-funded climate denialists and the fact that "with its slower, incremental sequence, [climate change] lends itself less to the apocalyptic drama," a large swathe of humanity has numbed themselves to the reality of climate change. Yet Lifton draws a message of hope from the Paris climate meeting of 2015 where representatives of virtually all nations joined in the recognition that we are a single species in deep trouble. Here, Lifton suggests in this lucid and moving book that recalls Rachel Carson and Jonathan Schell, was evidence of how we might call upon the human mind—"our greatest evolutionary asset"—to translate a growing species awareness—or "climate swerve"—into action to sustain our habitat and civilization.
This is the difficulty you're looking for. 200 extreme difficulty level puzzles with solutions in the back. Nothing worth doing is easy, and improving your powers of problem solving and logic is worth doing. Give your brain something to chew on. Compact 5x8 travel friendly size for experienced sudoku solvers with glossy cover. Great for killing time. Not for beginners.
This is the difficulty you're looking for. 200 extreme difficulty level puzzles with solutions in the back. Nothing worth doing is easy, and improving your powers of problem solving and logic is worth doing. Give your brain something to chew on. Compact 5x8 travel friendly size for experienced sudoku solvers with glossy cover. Great for killing time. Not for beginners.
This is the difficulty you're looking for. 200 extreme difficulty level puzzles with solutions in the back. Nothing worth doing is easy, and improving your powers of problem solving and logic is worth doing. Give your brain something to chew on. Compact 5x8 travel friendly size for experienced sudoku solvers with glossy cover. Great for killing time. Not for beginners.
This is the difficulty you're looking for. 200 extreme difficulty level puzzles with solutions in the back. Nothing worth doing is easy, and improving your powers of problem solving and logic is worth doing. Give your brain something to chew on. Compact 5x8 travel friendly size for experienced sudoku solvers with glossy cover. Great for killing time. Not for beginners.
This is the difficulty you're looking for. 200 extreme difficulty level puzzles with solutions in the back. Nothing worth doing is easy, and improving your powers of problem solving and logic is worth doing. Give your brain something to chew on. Compact 5x8 travel friendly size for experienced sudoku solvers with glossy cover. Great for killing time. Not for beginners.
“This crazy, gorgeous family novel” written at the end of the Great Depression “is one of the great literary achievements of the twentieth century” (Jonathan Franzen, The New York Times). First published in 1940, The Man Who Loved Children was rediscovered in 1965 thanks to the poet Randall Jarrell’s eloquent introduction (included in this ebook edition), which compares Christina Stead to Leo Tolstoy. Today, it stands as a masterpiece of dysfunctional family life. In a country crippled by the Great Depression, Sam and Henny Pollit have too much—too much contempt for one another, too many children, too much strain under endless obligation. Flush with ego and chilling charisma, Sam torments and manipulates his children in an esoteric world of his own imagining. Henny looks on desperately, all too aware of the madness at the root of her husband’s behavior. And Louie, the damaged, precocious adolescent girl at the center of their clashes, is the “ugly duckling” whose struggle will transfix contemporary readers. Named one of the best novels of the twentieth century by Newsweek, Stead’s semiautobiographical work reads like a Depression-era The Glass Castle. In the New York Times, Jonathan Franzen wrote of this classic, “I carry it in my head the way I carry childhood memories; the scenes are of such precise horror and comedy that I feel I didn’t read the book so much as live it.”
This is the difficulty you're looking for. 200 extreme difficulty level puzzles with solutions in the back. Nothing worth doing is easy, and improving your powers of problem solving and logic is worth doing. Give your brain something to chew on. Compact 5x8 travel friendly size for experienced sudoku solvers with glossy cover. Great for killing time. Not for beginners.
Packed with more than a hundred color illustrations and a wide variety of puzzles and brainteasers, Taking Sudoku Seriously uses this popular craze as the starting point for a fun-filled introduction to higher mathematics. How many Sudoku solution squares are there? What shapes other than three-by-three blocks can serve as acceptable Sudoku regions? What is the fewest number of starting clues a sound Sudoku puzzle can have? Does solving Sudoku require mathematics? Jason Rosenhouse and Laura Taalman show that answering these questions opens the door to a wealth of interesting mathematics. Indeed, they show that Sudoku puzzles and their variants are a gateway into mathematical thinking generally. Among many topics, the authors look at the notion of a Latin square--an object of long-standing interest to mathematicians--of which Sudoku squares are a special case; discuss how one finds interesting Sudoku puzzles; explore the connections between Sudoku, graph theory, and polynomials; and consider Sudoku extremes, including puzzles with the maximal number of vacant regions, with the minimal number of starting clues, and numerous others. The book concludes with a gallery of novel Sudoku variations--just pure solving fun! Most of the puzzles are original to this volume, and all solutions to the puzzles appear in the back of the book or in the text itself. A math book and a puzzle book, Taking Sudoku Seriously will change the way readers look at Sudoku and mathematics, serving both as an introduction to mathematics for puzzle fans and as an exploration of the intricacies of Sudoku for mathematics buffs.